AL - City of Florence increases local tax ratesEffective March 1, 2019, the city of Florence increases the local Alabama sales and use tax rates for the following from 3.5% to 4.5%:general items;admissions to places of amusement and entertainment;...

The final regulations require the agency to inspect no fewer units than the number specified in the "Low-Income Housing Credit Minimum Unit Sample Size Reference Chart." The reference chart can be found in Rev. Proc. 2016-15, I.R.B. 2016-11, 435, and is borrowed from the U.S. Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Real Estate Assessment Center Protocol (the REAC protocol). Previously, an agency was permitted to inspect 20 percent of the low-income housing units in the project if this was lesser than the number required by the reference chart. This change addresses a concern that limiting physical inspections to 20 percent of units in small projects is not sufficient to ensure overall compliance with habitability and low-income requirements.

All-Buildings Requirement

No change is made to the requirement that an agency must inspect all buildings in a low-income housing project by the end of the second calendar year after the year in which the last building in the project is placed in service unless a project inspection is conducted under the REAC protocol. Suggestions that the IRS dispense with the all-buildings requirement for agencies not using the REAC protocol were not adopted.

Reasonable Notice Time Frame Shortened

A building owner and tenants are allowed a maximum 15 day advance notice that a project will be inspected. The temporary regulations allowed a 30-day notice period. The particular units to be inspected may only be identified on the day of the inspection. The 15 day advance notice limit will also apply to reviews of low-income certifications.

Amendment of Agency’s Qualified Allocation Plan

The final regulations are effective on February 26, 2019. However, an agency only needs to amend it qualified allocation plan by December 31, 2020, to reflect the requirements in the final regulations.

Rev. Proc. 2016-15 is obsolete with respect to an agency as of the date that on which the agency amends its qualified allocation plan.

The Senate’s top Democratic tax writer is calling on the IRS and Treasury to further waive underpayment penalties for the 2018 tax year. Nearly 30 million taxpayers are expected to have underpaid taxes last year, according to the Government Accountability Office (GAO).

The Senate’s top Democratic tax writer is calling on the IRS and Treasury to further waive underpayment penalties for the 2018 tax year. Nearly 30 million taxpayers are expected to have underpaid taxes last year, according to the Government Accountability Office (GAO).

Underpayment Penalty

The IRS announced in IRS News Release IR-2019-3 that it would waive the underpayment penalty for any taxpayer who paid at least 85 percent of their total tax liability during the 2018 tax year. The usual threshold is 90 percent. However, Senate Finance Committee (SFC) ranking member Ron Wyden, D-Ore., has said that the IRS should "do more."

"Instead of penalizing those who paid less than 90 percent of what they owed in 2018, now they’re penalizing those who paid less than 85 percent," Wyden said on February 7 from the Senate floor. "That was one small step in the right direction," he added.

Before the IRS’s news release, Wyden wrote to Treasury and the IRS urging the waiver of underpayment penalties for withholding errors related to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) ( P.L. 115-97). Although the IRS did lower the penalty threshold for the 2018 tax year, Wyden stated on February 7 that "nobody should be penalized for the Trump administration’s mistakes on tax withholding."

Democrats are largely opposed to the TCJA as a whole, and claim that Republicans’ tax code overhaul was rushed. Thus, significant tax withholding errors and underpayments are expected to be incurred. "Change the penalty thresholds. Extend safe harbors. Whatever needs to happen," Wyden said.

Additionally, several Republicans have also voiced their concern about the expected increase in underpayment related to withholding. SFC Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, recently urged the IRS to be "lenient" on underpayment penalties for 2018, as it is the first tax year since tax reform implementation.

AICPA

The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) has likewise urged Treasury and the IRS to provide more extensive penalty relief. "The substantial uncertainty surrounding the implementation of the TCJA and the updated federal tax withholding tables presented a challenge for many taxpayers in understanding and accounting for their tax liability," Annette Nellen, chair of the AICPA’s Tax Executive Committee said in a recent letter to Treasury and the IRS. The AICPA has recommended an 80 percent threshold for the underpayment penalty waiver.

Senators have introduced a bipartisan bill specifically tailored to reduce excise taxes and regulations for the U.S. craft beverage industry. The bill aims to promote job creation and permanently reduce certain taxes and compliance burdens.

Senators have introduced a bipartisan bill specifically tailored to reduce excise taxes and regulations for the U.S. craft beverage industry. The bill aims to promote job creation and permanently reduce certain taxes and compliance burdens.

Craft Beverage Tax Reform

The Craft Beverage Modernization and Tax Reform Bill of 2019 was introduced on February 6 by Senate Finance Committee (SFC) ranking member Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo.

"By modernizing burdensome rules and taxes for craft beverage producers, this legislation will level the playing field and allow these innovators to further grow and thrive," Wyden said in a press release. The comprehensive measure is supported by the entire craft beverage industry, according to a summary of the bill.

Generally, the Craft Beverage Modernization and Tax Reform Bill of 2019 would implement the following provisions:

For Brewers:

Reduce excise taxes to provide more cash flow to reinvest in personal business growth.

Simplify rules for ingredient approval and brewery collaboration.

For Vintners:

Expand the wine producer tax credit.

Expand allowances for tax purposes on carbonation and alcohol content for certain wines.

For Distillers:

Establish reduced excise taxes for small craft distilleries.

Reduce restrictions on tax-free transfers of spirits between distillers.

The bill would also exempt beverage producers from certain capitalization rules for aged products.

"The craft beverage industry is driven by small businesses that support thousands of jobs and contribute billions in economic output," Blunt said in the press release.

The IRS’s proposed 50-percent gross income locational rule on the active conduct of Opportunity Zone businesses is garnering criticism from stakeholders and lawmakers alike. The IRS released proposed regulations, NPRM REG-115420-18, for tax reform’s Opportunity Zone program last October.

The IRS’s proposed 50-percent gross income locational rule on the active conduct of Opportunity Zone businesses is garnering criticism from stakeholders and lawmakers alike. The IRS released proposed regulations, NPRM REG-115420-18, for tax reform’s Opportunity Zone program last October.

50-Percent Locational Rule

Many stakeholders have urged the IRS to reconsider its proposed rule requiring that at least 50-percent of gross income of a Qualified Opportunity Zone (QOZ) business is derived from the active conduct of a trade or business within the QOZ. The IRS heard from several of these stakeholders at a full house public hearing on the proposed regulations held last week at IRS headquarters in Washington, D.C.

"[W]e’re concerned that manufacturing businesses, e-commerce enterprises, and others that have the potential to spur significant economic activity could be excluded inadvertently because of this rule," Stefan Pryor, Rhode Island Secretary of Commerce said at the hearing. Additionally, other stakeholders commented that the proposed rule would go against congressional intent.

Comment. There is no locational-related rule for gross income of QOZ businesses included in the law’s statutory language. However, the statutory language does provide a tangible property test to ensure qualifying businesses are predominantly located within the QOZ.

QOZ Business Congressional Intent

To that end, the bipartisan, bicameral tax writers who drafted the original QOZ bill language, too, have urged the IRS to remove the 50-percent gross income locational requirement.

The Opportunity Zone program was enacted under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act ( P.L. 115-97) in 2017. The program is housed under new Code Secs. 1400Z-1 and 1400Z-2. Although not a single Democrat voted for the TCJA, the Opportunity Zone program was based on a bicameral measure sponsored by a group of bipartisan tax writers.

"Since many businesses derive income from the sale of goods and services outside of a single census tract, this would significantly limit the ability for local operating businesses to qualify for Opportunity Fund investment, contrary to congressional intent," the lawmakers wrote in a recent letter to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin. "Even for those businesses who might qualify under this rule, it would impose immense new administrative burdens to track and report the location of each source of business income," they added.

Second Round of Proposed Regulations

Currently, the IRS is working on a second batch of proposed regulations for Opportunity Zones. Those proposed rules "hopefully will see the light of day shortly," Scott Dinwiddie, an IRS official in the Income Tax and Accounting division said at last week’s hearing.

The IRS has said that it is postponing its plan to discontinue faxing taxpayer transcripts. The IRS statement came on the heels of a letter sent earlier this week from bipartisan leaders of the Senate Finance Committee urging such a delay.

The IRS has said that it is postponing its plan to discontinue faxing taxpayer transcripts. The IRS statement came on the heels of a letter sent earlier this week from bipartisan leaders of the Senate Finance Committee urging such a delay.

IRS Cybersecurity

The IRS announced in IRS News Release IR-2018-256 last December that it would stop its tax transcript faxing service for individuals and businesses on February 4, 2019. The IRS cited to reasons of taxpayer security for the change in procedure. To that end, ceasing the IRS’s transcript faxing service would better prohibit cybercriminals from obtaining taxpayer data, according to the IRS.

Grassley, Wyden Urge Delay

SFC Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and ranking member Ron Wyden, D-Ore., sent IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig a letter earlier this week expressing concern with the IRS’s original timeline for discontinuing the tax transcript faxing service. The bipartisan leaders did not ask the IRS to eliminate its plan to discontinue the particular service. However, they did encourage the IRS to extend the date of discontinuation for the sake of taxpayers and practitioners in light of the recent partial government shutdown, which included the IRS.

"[W]e encourage the IRS to delay its planned discontinuation of faxing taxpayer information until such time that the agency can reasonably resolve the legitimate concerns of the tax-practitioner community about alternatives to the IRS faxing taxpayer information," Grassley and Wyden wrote. "Of course, such a delay should not compromise the security or privacy of taxpayer information."

IRS Extends Transcript Faxing Service

The IRS’s Wage & Investment Division issued a January 30 statement stating that the IRS will extend its transcript faxing service beyond February 4. Additionally, the IRS said it is reviewing options for a new timeline and will provide taxpayers and practitioners advance notice of the new date.

I sold a small piece of property two years ago. Going through my records recently I realized that the gain on that sale was never reported on my tax return. What should I do now?

A: The usual solution is to file an amended return for that year, paying any additional tax due plus interest and a late payment penalty. You are not permitted simply to add it to this year's tax return.

An amended return must be filed, and any additional tax due paid, by any taxpayer who has omitted an income item for a previous tax year for which the statute of limitations period (which is generally three years) is still open. When an original, and then an amended return is filed, the statute of limitations generally starts running on the original filing.

Some taxpayers think they can wait until a few days before the three-year limitations period is about to expire to file their amended return to avoid any further IRS audit of it. They should think again. To cover this ploy, an exception to the three-year limitations period on assessment is made when the taxpayer files an amended return within 60 days before the end of the limitations period on assessment. In this situation, the IRS has 60 days from when it gets the amended return to assess the additional tax due as reported, even if the usual three-year period would normally otherwise end.

Taxpayers who plan to wait until after the three-year limitation expires, and then do nothing, are playing an even more dangerous game.

First, the IRS tends to pull most returns for audit between the second and third year after filing. If the IRS catches a taxpayer for unreported income before he or she fesses up, the penalties are generally much worse.

Second, even though initially not reporting some taxable gain may be just a mistake, hiding the income once you discover that it has not been reported may subject you to criminal fraud, which carries even higher penalties …and no statute of limitations.